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The Antifungal Protein AfpB Induces Regulated Cell Death in Its Parental Fungus Penicillium digitatum

Filamentous fungi produce small cysteine-rich proteins with potent, specific antifungal activity, offering the potential to fight fungal infections that severely threaten human health and food safety and security. The genome of the citrus postharvest fungal pathogen Penicillium digitatum encodes one...

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Autores principales: Bugeda, Adrià, Garrigues, Sandra, Gandía, Mónica, Manzanares, Paloma, Marcos, Jose F., Coca, María
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: American Society for Microbiology 2020
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7449623/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/32848004
http://dx.doi.org/10.1128/mSphere.00595-20
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author Bugeda, Adrià
Garrigues, Sandra
Gandía, Mónica
Manzanares, Paloma
Marcos, Jose F.
Coca, María
author_facet Bugeda, Adrià
Garrigues, Sandra
Gandía, Mónica
Manzanares, Paloma
Marcos, Jose F.
Coca, María
author_sort Bugeda, Adrià
collection PubMed
description Filamentous fungi produce small cysteine-rich proteins with potent, specific antifungal activity, offering the potential to fight fungal infections that severely threaten human health and food safety and security. The genome of the citrus postharvest fungal pathogen Penicillium digitatum encodes one of these antifungal proteins, namely AfpB. Biotechnologically produced AfpB inhibited the growth of major pathogenic fungi at minimal concentrations, surprisingly including its parental fungus, and conferred protection to crop plants against fungal infections. This study reports an in-depth characterization of the AfpB mechanism of action, showing that it is a cell-penetrating protein that triggers a regulated cell death program in the target fungus. We prove the importance of AfpB interaction with the fungal cell wall to exert its killing activity, for which protein mannosylation is required. We also show that the potent activity of AfpB correlates with its rapid and efficient uptake by fungal cells through an energy-dependent process. Once internalized, AfpB induces a transcriptional reprogramming signaled by reactive oxygen species that ends in cell death. Our data show that AfpB activates a self-injury program, suggesting that this protein has a biological function in the parental fungus beyond defense against competitors, presumably more related to regulation of the fungal population. Our results demonstrate that this protein is a potent antifungal that acts through various targets to kill fungal cells through a regulated process, making AfpB a promising compound for the development of novel biofungicides with multiple fields of application in crop and postharvest protection, food preservation, and medical therapies. IMPORTANCE Disease-causing fungi pose a serious threat to human health and food safety and security. The limited number of licensed antifungals, together with the emergence of pathogenic fungi with multiple resistance to available antifungals, represents a serious challenge for medicine and agriculture. Therefore, there is an urgent need for new compounds with high fungal specificity and novel antifungal mechanisms. Antifungal proteins in general, and AfpB from Penicillium digitatum in particular, are promising molecules for the development of novel antifungals. This study on AfpB’s mode of action demonstrates its potent, specific fungicidal activity through the interaction with multiple targets, presumably reducing the risk of evolving fungal resistance, and through a regulated cell death process, uncovering this protein as an excellent candidate for a novel biofungicide. The in-depth knowledge on AfpB mechanistic function presented in this work is important to guide its possible future clinical and agricultural applications.
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spelling pubmed-74496232020-09-09 The Antifungal Protein AfpB Induces Regulated Cell Death in Its Parental Fungus Penicillium digitatum Bugeda, Adrià Garrigues, Sandra Gandía, Mónica Manzanares, Paloma Marcos, Jose F. Coca, María mSphere Research Article Filamentous fungi produce small cysteine-rich proteins with potent, specific antifungal activity, offering the potential to fight fungal infections that severely threaten human health and food safety and security. The genome of the citrus postharvest fungal pathogen Penicillium digitatum encodes one of these antifungal proteins, namely AfpB. Biotechnologically produced AfpB inhibited the growth of major pathogenic fungi at minimal concentrations, surprisingly including its parental fungus, and conferred protection to crop plants against fungal infections. This study reports an in-depth characterization of the AfpB mechanism of action, showing that it is a cell-penetrating protein that triggers a regulated cell death program in the target fungus. We prove the importance of AfpB interaction with the fungal cell wall to exert its killing activity, for which protein mannosylation is required. We also show that the potent activity of AfpB correlates with its rapid and efficient uptake by fungal cells through an energy-dependent process. Once internalized, AfpB induces a transcriptional reprogramming signaled by reactive oxygen species that ends in cell death. Our data show that AfpB activates a self-injury program, suggesting that this protein has a biological function in the parental fungus beyond defense against competitors, presumably more related to regulation of the fungal population. Our results demonstrate that this protein is a potent antifungal that acts through various targets to kill fungal cells through a regulated process, making AfpB a promising compound for the development of novel biofungicides with multiple fields of application in crop and postharvest protection, food preservation, and medical therapies. IMPORTANCE Disease-causing fungi pose a serious threat to human health and food safety and security. The limited number of licensed antifungals, together with the emergence of pathogenic fungi with multiple resistance to available antifungals, represents a serious challenge for medicine and agriculture. Therefore, there is an urgent need for new compounds with high fungal specificity and novel antifungal mechanisms. Antifungal proteins in general, and AfpB from Penicillium digitatum in particular, are promising molecules for the development of novel antifungals. This study on AfpB’s mode of action demonstrates its potent, specific fungicidal activity through the interaction with multiple targets, presumably reducing the risk of evolving fungal resistance, and through a regulated cell death process, uncovering this protein as an excellent candidate for a novel biofungicide. The in-depth knowledge on AfpB mechanistic function presented in this work is important to guide its possible future clinical and agricultural applications. American Society for Microbiology 2020-08-26 /pmc/articles/PMC7449623/ /pubmed/32848004 http://dx.doi.org/10.1128/mSphere.00595-20 Text en Copyright © 2020 Bugeda et al. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International license (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/) .
spellingShingle Research Article
Bugeda, Adrià
Garrigues, Sandra
Gandía, Mónica
Manzanares, Paloma
Marcos, Jose F.
Coca, María
The Antifungal Protein AfpB Induces Regulated Cell Death in Its Parental Fungus Penicillium digitatum
title The Antifungal Protein AfpB Induces Regulated Cell Death in Its Parental Fungus Penicillium digitatum
title_full The Antifungal Protein AfpB Induces Regulated Cell Death in Its Parental Fungus Penicillium digitatum
title_fullStr The Antifungal Protein AfpB Induces Regulated Cell Death in Its Parental Fungus Penicillium digitatum
title_full_unstemmed The Antifungal Protein AfpB Induces Regulated Cell Death in Its Parental Fungus Penicillium digitatum
title_short The Antifungal Protein AfpB Induces Regulated Cell Death in Its Parental Fungus Penicillium digitatum
title_sort antifungal protein afpb induces regulated cell death in its parental fungus penicillium digitatum
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7449623/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/32848004
http://dx.doi.org/10.1128/mSphere.00595-20
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